.TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY . , - . , - . . . , - . , - , , . I . , ., - -, F. IT , r., I , , , TUESDAY, OCTOBER -23, 1921, TH-MC-GA D-L TESAY-OTOER23--2 VARSITY SQUAD PREPARES FOR WISCONSIN INVASION EAR PASSING ATTACST"STS DISCLOSE CAUSE OF WOLVERINE F CARDINAL [LEVEN DEFEAT BY BUCKEYESI * FRIEDMAYS DETROIT A QUINTET OF DETERMINED BADGER INVADERS lii 4 Wolverines Will Scrimmage Frosh Team Using Badger Running And Passing Plays; MICHIGAN GFFENSE WEAK With a light workout assigned to the men who participated in the Ohio- State game Satu.rday, the Wolverine squad turned its atten- tion to the formidable task of pre- paring to meet the invasion of their third strong Conference opponent of the seeason, Glen Thistleth- waite's Wisconsin eleven. Coach Franklin Cappon, who scouted the Badgers in their games+ with North Dakota and Purdue, re- ports that they are an aggressive team with a strong passing attack I that produces touchdowns. It was due to this fact that they were able to come back in the second half of Saturday's game to tie Purdue at 19-all. Although somewhat disappointed after losing their third game of the seeason, the Wolverines showed a wonderful morale and a determina- tion that should go far towardl their efforts to break into the win column this week-end. Varsity Shows Good Morale Whatever the faults of the ! Wolverines may be, it cannot be said that they' have not fought, and fought well. Saturday's game was a repition of the Indiana contest, with the team displaying undeni- able gameness and a stubborn de- fense against alTost overwhelm-, ing odds. Michigan came back to score aft- er a fumbled punt had paved the. way for the first Ohio score short- ly after the opening whistle, and even after they saw their single point margin vanish, the Maize and Blue gridmen never stopped fight- ing. The hoped-for offensive strength. failed to materialize at Columbus, and the solution of this riddle ap-, pears to be the most important problem facing the coaching staff at the present time. Neither the passes nor the running plays were functioning against the fast charg- ing Buckeye line. Near the close of the game a trio of pony backs, Dahlem, Mc- Bride and Wheeler were rushed into the game, and momentarily it looked as if the Wolverines might make at last minute threat to score, but this hope was smother- (Continued -on Page 7) IBy morris Quinn Statistics of the Ohio-Michigan game reveal that the Buckeye held a decided edge in every department of play with the exception of punt- ing. And although the Bucks were guilty of fumbling more frequent- ly than their opponents, they also proved more adept at recovering the oval.! In yardage gained from rush- ing, the Buckeye speed mer-k chants, Eby and Coffee ac- counted for most of the Ohio total. Eby made 74 yards in 17 attempts, while Coffee made 60 in 12' tries. Of Michigan's 50 yards gainea from the line of scrimmage, RichI accounted for 21 in 14 tries, Gembis 5 in the same number, Wheeler 13,1 Straub 6 and Holmes 4. The Scarlet and Grey team also lbeld a decided edge in yards gained from passing, completing 5 of their 14 tries for a 79-yard gain. Incidentally two of the completeA passes scored touchdowns. While the Wolves managed to complete 2 of their 6 attempts, the total gain was only 10 yards, and two others were intercepted by the Buckeye secondary defense. In punting alone did the Maize and Blue outfit hold an edge, Wheeler averaging 35 yards in 4 tries and Holmes 37 in the same number. Eby aver-, aged 33 in 10 attempts and Fouch 3S on 2.I Pitted against the giant Barratt, Al Bovard played a stellar game at the center post until he was in- jured late in the third quarter. Outweighed at least 50 pounds, Bovard played his opponent to a standstill. Barratt's- much heralded abil- ity at kicking goals from place- ment failed to materialize un- til late in the game. His first atempt was wide an' the sec- ond blocked before he managed to get one between the goal posts. The consistent work of Otto Pommerening at tackle stamped him as one of the greatest linemen in the Conference. He was a bul- (Continued on Page 7) ELEVEN SCORES 28-0 WIN OVER NEW YORK Bennie Friedman's Detroit Wol- verines added another to their string of consecutive victories when they administered a 28-0 defeat to the New York Giants Sunday in the University of Detroit stadium. The Detroit eleven, a new aggrega- tion, outshone the veteran Giants in every department of the game. Friedman was almost the whole show with his bullet-like heavies, his place kicking, and his spectac- ular 58 yard run through a broken field for a touchdown when he went back into the game at the start of the fourth quarter. The former Al-American quarter back, who brought fame to Michi- gan for three consecutive years, was the pivotal point of a power- ful football team against which the New Yorkers could do little. The great . Bruce Caldwell, who set Yale afire with his all-around work in 1925-'26, was completely stopped by the Friedman team, but' Hinkey Haines, former Penn State ace, played stellar football. Jack McBride, former Syracuse back- field star, gained some ground for the Giants, and Nesser, a veteran Ohio professional, was a lion on de- fense. Aside from an occasional flash of defensive power, the Giants lacked the punch, and the result of the game was never in doubt after the first quarter, when Friedman and his associates gathered two touch- downs and two extra points. MINNESOTA, IL-INOIS FAVORED IN BIG TEN Ohio And Iowa Also Have Perfect Records; Michigan, Chicago And Indiana Lose TIE ELIMINATES BADGERS 0-- I BIG TEN STANDINGS MVinnesota.... Ohio State .... Illinois ....... Iowa ......... Wisconsin .... Indiana...... Purdue...... Northwestern Chicago ...... MICHIGAN . . W. 2 2 1 1 1 or 0 0 0 L. a , a : T Td. Pct. 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 1 1.000 0 .500 1 .000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 i^ r .**.** . ;.9 a"**** **** Ls la }_ --.. ^b-- I Minnesota and Illinois conclu- sively proved that they must be reckoned with as leading title con- tenders in last week's Conference games, while Wisconsin was prac- tically eliminated from the race for Big Ten honors when the Cardinals were held to a tie by the rejuven- ated Purdue eleven, Coach Spears' Gophers crashed through the Chicago team for five touchdowns, Hovde accounting for three of them, and the Maroons were humbled, 33-7. Although bIndiana put up a game fight against the title-de- ,fending Illinois team, the Indians demonstrated too much power in their 13-7 victory.cThe score does not indicate the concelusive super- iority of Coach Zuppke's charges, who registered 19 first downs to (Continued on Page 7) ROCHESTER UNIVERSITY: Ninety courses are offered in the extension division, twenty more I than given last year. FRESHMEN START WRESTLING WORK' Russell Sauer, former Conference titleholder and three-year veteran of Wolverine mat fame has been engaged as freshman wrestling coach. With 52 men reporting at the initial workout, Coach Sauer is highly optimistic and expects to f develop considerable potential Var- sity talent from the yearling squad. A freshman wrestling tourna- ment will be scheduled before the Christmas holidays and the results of this tourney will undoubtedly play a considerable part in the awarding of numerals at the end of the year. Above are five of the Badgers who will invade Ann Arbor next Saturday determined to make up for the 19-19 Wisconsin Purdue tie by gaining the first Cardinal vic- tory over the Maize and Blue since 1902. Rose, brother of Gene who play- ed -three years on the Badger var- sity is one of the most promising of Thistlethwaite's sophomores, and will probably see action in the back- field against the Wolverines. Kreski will also make a bid for a backfield post Saturday, while Welch and Ziese, since Mansfield has been shifted to fullback, have alnstsinched the wing positions. * Connors, with Shomaker at cen- ter on one side of him, and Binish, veteran tackle at the other, has aided in making the right side of the Badger line impregnable. 1ogw - iA&.Er itAC _ MIDDIES DEFEAT DUKE TEAM Navy, after sustaining three con- secutive losses, finally broke into the win column Saturday by de- feating a lighter Duke university eleven, 6-0. Lloyd scoring a touch- down. 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